Rossman Estate

76 A.2d 450, 168 Pa. Super. 6, 1950 Pa. Super. LEXIS 542
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 14, 1950
DocketAppeals, Nos. 1 and 2
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 76 A.2d 450 (Rossman Estate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rossman Estate, 76 A.2d 450, 168 Pa. Super. 6, 1950 Pa. Super. LEXIS 542 (Pa. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

Opinion by

Hirt, J.,

Decedent, Anna S. Rossman, at the time of her death was living in a rented room in the house of Eva Herring in Williamsport. In the early morning of August 1, 1947, she was found unconscious on the bathroom floor of the Herring home. She was removed to a hospital where she died about seven hours later without regaining consciousness. In a holographic will dated March 6, 1946, she, after making a number of specific bequests, disposed of her residuary estate, amounting to something over $10,000 thus: “I give, devise and bequeath to those who are kind to me in my last illness and care for me all I have left without tax”. This residuary-clause, in paragraph 11 of the will, gives rise to the [8]*8controversies in this estate. The auditor appointed by the court awarded the residuary estate in five equal shares to persons who in his judgment qualified by meeting the description of the above provision of the will; the lower court dismissed exceptions to the auditor’s report and ordered distribution in accordance therewith. Two appeals before us will be disposed of in this opinion. In one of them Albert B. Hall and Minnie R. Hall, his wife, who together were awarded one share under paragraph 11, contend that they qualify as sole beneficiaries of the entire residuary estate to the exclusion of the other persons who would participate under the court’s order. In the second appeal by Ralph E. Dinges it is contended that the testamentary disposition of the residuary estate has failed for want of qualification by any beneficiary, under its terms. Accordingly, Ralph E. Dinges, for himself and his sister Mary Dinges Smith, claims the residuary estate under the intestate law; they are the sole heirs at law of decedent.

Anna S. Rossman was 80 years old when she died. There is little dispute as to her physical condition prior to her death and no difference of opinion as to the cause of death. She died from cerebral hemorrhage. Dr. J. S. Purnell, her family physician, testified that she had a condition designated by him as “hypertensive arteriosclerosis” which had grown progressively worse during the last five or six years of her life. He testified: “I don’t know what disease caused her death, but I can say that cerebral hemorrhage is a phase of hypertensive arteriosclerosis disease”. Dr. Stuart Gibson, who attended her when stricken, testified that from a prior examination he knew that she had hypertensive arteriosclerosis and that the combination of high blood pressure and existing hardening of the arteries “lead up to the cerebral hemorrhage”. There was this difference in the testimony of these two medical experts: Dr. [9]*9Purnell considered “hypertensive arteriosclerosis” a disease ; Dr. Gibson testified in effect that hardening of the arteries is not a disease but a condition normal to growing old.

The findings of the auditor accepted as a basis for the distribution of the residuary estate by the court may be summarized thus: The stroke suffered by decedent on August 1, 1947, and her moribund condition which persisted thereafter for seven hours, until her death, did not constitute her “last illness” as contemplated by her in her will. The auditor found however that the last illness of Anna S. Rossman was hypertensive arteriosclerosis which was a lingering illness in this instance extending over a period of five or six years and ending in cerebral hemorrhage and death.

The award to the appellants Albert B. Hall and Minnie R. Hall, jointly, of one-fifth of the residuary estate, is based upon the following testimony: the Halls helped the decedent to move from Mifflinburg to the home of Mrs. Herring in Williamsport five months before her death. Arrangements had been made for decedent to live with the Halls in a rented room at some time in the future. This intention was never consummated although the Halls had moved some of her furniture into their home. When decedent was stricken Mrs. Hall came to the Herring home in response to a call. She there put a pillow under decedent’s head and covered her with a blanket, and she accompanied Mrs. Rossman to the hospital in the ambulance. She remained with decedent in the hospital until her death and contributed to her comfort, although unconscious, by bathing her eyes and moistening her mouth with mineral oil. On this slender thread hangs the award to the Halls. The awards of the other shares in the residuary estate to named beneficiaries are based on nothing more than similar kindly acts by neighbors and friends over a period of five or six years. Certainly [10]*10the Halls are not entitled to the whole of the residuary estate, as they contend in their appeal. And in our view, they, along with all of the other beneficiaries under the court’s order, are not entitled to any part of the residuary estate. It is our conclusion that, as to the residue, the testatrix died intestate.

The question whether arteriosclerosis, with attending heightened tension is to be regarded a disease has been raised in the technical field of insurance contracts especially those providing for double indemnity for death from accident, independently of all other causes. In such cases if the death of the insured results from accidental injury in actual conjunction with a preexisting and substantial physical infirmity there can be no recovery. This principle was recognized in Frame v. Prudential Ins. Co., 358 Pa. 103, 56 A. 2d 76 where it was contended that a hypertensive heart condition could not be excluded from the accidental injury as the cause of death. On that question Mr. Justice Stern said: “The right to recover on the policy was barred only if there was in fact such a contributing factor, not if, as a mere matter of speculation, there might have been. It might be added that there is an important difference between an actual disease and ailments or predispositions common to advancing age, such, for example, as arteriosclerosis in a degree not disproportionate to the age of the insured; this distinction was pointed out by Judge Cardozo in Silverstein v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 254 N.Y. 81, 171 N.E. 914, and has been approved by this court in Arnstein v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 329 Pa. 158, 162, 163, 196 A. 491, 493; Kelly v. Prudential Insurance Co., 334 Pa. 143, 151, 6 A. 2d 55, 59; and Real Estate Trust Co. of Philadelphia, Trustee, v. Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., 340 Pa. 533, 541, 542, 17 A. 2d 416, 420”.

The Frame case, supra, throws light on the present case but it does not control it. Hypertensive arterio[11]*11sclerosis is not necessarily an illness or disease under the law, and in common usage it is not always so regarded as a matter of fact. In the present case therefore, regardless of whether the tension of decedent’s hardened arteries was excessive for her age, it is her intention as disclosed by the language of the will, read in the light of the attending circumstances, that controls.

Testatrix disposed of her residuary estate in a single sentence. The language used does not unmistakably reveal her intention and this case falls within the rule of Jackson’s Estate, 337 Pa. 561, 12 A. 2d 338 which requires us to place ourselves in her position and take into consideration her situation in life and the facts and circumstances surrounding her at the time the will was executed. A “will must be considered with a thought to the conditions under which it was written”: Glasgow’s Estate, (No. 1), 243 Pa. 613, 90 A. 332.

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Bluebook (online)
76 A.2d 450, 168 Pa. Super. 6, 1950 Pa. Super. LEXIS 542, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rossman-estate-pasuperct-1950.